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Steven Pearson: Heroes and Villains at SubBasement Studios

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PLEASE RSVP BY March 5, 2008
CALL 410 659 6950 or email to: [email protected]
Opening Reception: SATURDAY March 8, 2008 6-8 pm

Steven Pearson’s newest body of work started in July of 2007, is still influenced by the following story:

Shuzan (shou-shan 926-992) once held up his shippe* to an assembly of his disciples and declared: Call this a shippe and you assert; call it not a shippe and you negate. Now do not assert nor negate, and what would you call it? Speak! Speak! One of the disciples came out of the ranks, took the shippe away from the master, and breaking it in two, exclaimed, What is this? – D.T. Suzuki, Introduction to Zen Buddhism.

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Steve is working within the restrictions of birch plywood, trying not to alter the pattern of the grain, but instead use color to activate and alter the perceived composition of the wood grain, by using harmonies and contrasts to minimize and accentuate particular areas. After the first few he noticed he was repeatedly combining a saturated red and a saturated blue to clarify the most distinct forms found in the wood grain. At the time, he was watching Superman Returns on DVD. This led him to start considering the Red and Blue forms as Heroes, and after some research he learned that the majority of Superman’s enemies are often clad in Purple and Green. Using these simple color combinations to identify the more striking shapes found within the wood grain encouraged him to invent implied narratives in each panel.

To keep the colors from becoming too predictable he had started using 1980’s Superman comic book covers as the source of palettes. He chose the 80’s, the time of his teenage years and Military Service, because Good and Evil were still being described to us in Black and White. The Cold War was still in progress, and we had a clearly defined enemy. Comics were drawn and written in those terms as well, and the colors were saturated and vibrant.

As he developed these ideas further, the comics of the 1990’s and 2000’s became sources of color palettes. At that time in comics, Good and Evil becomes more nebulous, often existing in a gray area in between, and the colors become more deep and neutral.

Pearson is also influenced by the overall composition of the comic book page, and has recently started to build structures with multiple sheets of plywood in varying shapes and sizes, changing the direction of the grain from panel to panel. He’s intrigued by how comic artists use the size and shape of each panel to depict time and space, to speed through time, or linger on a moment, and you can see in his upcoming One Man exhibit at Subbasement Artist Studios, how such a device could be interesting to use in non-objective painting.

Visit http://www.subbasementartiststudios.com/index.html for location
Visit www.srpearson.com to see a sample of work

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